9 Things You Should Never Flush Down a Toilet

You may temporarily get away with treating your toilet like a garbage can, but sooner or later you’ll end up with an expensive plumbing bill.

Toilets were designed to do only one thing: Dispose of human waste and toilet paper.

Even so, many people are tempted to use them to get rid of various things. Clogged toilets are caused by everything from discarded food to cat litter.

In addition to damaging your plumbing, some items can harm the environment if they find their way into the ecosystem.

Following are things you should never flush down your toilet.

1. Cigarette butts

You may think cigarette butts are small enough to pass through your plumbing without causing problems. But they can stop up your pipes because, unlike toilet paper, they don’t dissolve in water, says Stephany Smith, a plumber at the Fantastic Services property maintenance company in London.

2. Tampons and sanitary napkins

The cotton used in tampons and sanitary napkins wasn’t meant to be flushed down toilets, says Glenn Gallas, the vice president of operations at Mr. Rooter Plumbing.

“The cotton in these items can easily snag and grab on just about anything,” he tells Money Talks News.

In addition to harming your own plumbing, such products can clog up the waste disposal system down the line, he notes. Cotton then must be removed from the waste stream by workers and sent to landfills.

Tampon maker Tampax notes that while its products biodegrade in landfills, flushing tampons is not the best way to dispose of them. It’s better for the environment to put them in the trash.

3. Cooking oil and grease

It’s always a mistake to attempt to dispose of cooking oil or grease in a toilet. These substances will “wreak havoc in your plumbing system,” says Smith.

Alex Berezow, vice president of scientific affairs for the nonprofit American Council on Science and Health, explains to Money Talks News:

“Cooking oil absolutely clogs pipes because it solidifies as it cools.”

4. Stringy materials

Hair, dental floss, thread and string can cause a mountain of troubles if flushed down the toilet, Smith tells Money Talks News. That’s because they don’t easily dissolve in water.

6. Medicines

Wastewater treatment plants aren’t designed to filter out medicines. So, drugs that are flushed down toilets eventually may enter rivers, streams and lakes, reports The New York Times.

“While prescription medication, over the counter medication, and other substances don’t necessarily mess up your pipes, the ingredients in pharmaceuticals can pose dangers to your water supply,” says Gallas. “Instead, dispose of medications responsibly, through your local pharmacy or medication disposal program.”

7. Wet wipes

One of the easiest ways to clog your toilet and sewer lines is to flush wet wipes. Even if they are promoted as flushable, Smith doesn’t recommend putting them in your toilet.

Wet wipes have created clogs in aging sewage systems in some U.S. cities, Gallas says. That’s because they don’t disintegrate as quickly as toilet paper.

8. Food

Some foods — such as pasta, noodles, rice, grits and bread — absorb water and expand after you drop them into a toilet, says Smith. They are likely to form blockages in pipes.

To play it safe, never put food of any kind in your toilet.

9. Contact lenses

Many contact lenses are disposable. But if you flush them down the toilet, they won’t biodegrade easily, The New York Times reports. Some may end up polluting waterways.

Have you ever flushed something inappropriate down your toilet? What was the outcome? You can share your experience or thoughts with us by commenting below or on our Facebook page.